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Staten Island Then And www.nycfuture.org MAY 2011 STATEN ISLAND: THEN AND NOW It’s arguable that no other borough has changed as much as Staten Island over the past 20 years. This index of more than 80 charts and graphs provides the first comprehensive analysis of just how the borough has been transformed. CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 3 INDEX OF CHARTS 7 DEMOGRAPHICS 12 ECONOMY 16 DEVELOPMENT 20 TRANSPORTATION 22 COMMUTING 24 EDUCATION 25 This report was written by Laurel Tumarkin and Jonathan Bowles, and designed by Ahmad Dowla. The report was funded by the Staten Island Economic Development Corporation. General operating support for City Futures has been provided by Bernard F. and Alva B. Gimbel Foundation, Deutsche Bank, Fund for the City of New York, Salesforce Foundation, The Scherman Foundation, Inc., and Unitarian Universalist Veatch Program at Shelter Rock. The Center for an Urban Future is a New York City- based think tank dedicated to independent, fact- based research about critical issues affecting New York’s future, including economic development, workforce development, higher education and the arts. For more information or to sign up for our monthly e-mail bulletin, visit www.nycfuture.org. City Futures Board of Directors: Andrew Reicher (Chair), Margaret Anadu, Michael Connor, Russell Dubner, Gretchen Dykstra, David Lebenstein, Gifford Miller, Lisette Nieves, Jefrey Pollock, John Siegal, Stephen Sigmund, and Mark Winston Griffith. Cover photo: andyinnyc/flickr STATEN ISLAND: THEN AND NOW The past two decades have been a period of almost unprecedented change in New York City. During these 20 years, New York has gone from crime-ridden to the nation’s safest large city, a remarkable boom in high- end condos has transformed the skyline, much of the waterfront has been redeveloped, and neighborhoods from Times Square to the Lower East Side have been altered so fundamentally that they are almost unrecognizable to anyone who last visited them in the early 1990s. But in many ways, no other borough has changed as much as Staten Island. On the most basic level, Staten Island simply grew the fastest. It far outpaced all of the other boroughs in the rate of population growth between 1990 and 2010. However, the borough’s rapid population growth is only the tip of the iceberg. Over the past 20 years, there have been far-reaching changes to nearly every facet of life on Staten Island. This report takes a close examination of just what has changed. It provides the first comprehensive statistical analysis of the major trends that have shaped Staten Island over these two decades. Some of our statistical findings will be blatantly obvious to any Staten Islander who regularly drives across the borough at rush hour, takes classes at the College of Staten Island or operates a small business. But much of our data will come as a surprise. We hope it will also shed a light on several opportunities and challenges facing the borough over the next decade or two. Any study of Staten Island’s changes over the past investigations and security services (29 percent). On the two decades must start with its 24 percent increase in down side, there were 42 percent fewer travel agencies. population. This was significantly higher than the next In retail, there were big increases in electronics and fastest growing borough (the Bronx, with a 15 percent appliance stores (70 percent), full service restaurants (44 gain) and more than triple Manhattan’s growth rate. percent) and supermarkets and other grocery stores (25 While the population growth has been relatively percent) but declines in sporting goods stores (down 50 evenly spread across the borough, Community District 3 percent), florists (-41 percent), gas stations (-34 percent) on the island’s South Shore experienced both the largest and hardware stores (-24 percent). numerical increase (41,745) and rate of growth (33 And though new development has all but ground percent). Community District 1 on the North Shore, the to a halt—the number of building permits in 2009 only district to lose population between 1980 and 1990, (271 buildings) was actually lower than in 1990 (776 had a 29 percent increase between 1990 and 2008. buildings)—the borough’s office vacancy rate in 2010 It is an older borough today, with 16,000 more (8.6 percent) was at its lowest point since 2002 and the residents over the age of 65 in 2010 than in 1990. It is retail vacancy rate was a slim 2.9 percent, down from 4.5 also significantly more diverse. The share of white non- percent in 2007. And while the 2010 industrial vacancy Hispanic residents has fallen from 80 percent in 1990 to rate (5.3 percent) was higher than the level from the last 68 percent in 2010, while the share of residents who are five years, it is still about a third of what it was from 2000 Black, Hispanic and Asian has increased. These trends to 2003. will likely continue. In 2010, only 52 percent of Staten Meanwhile, the number of vacant parcels on Staten Islanders under the age of 18 were white non-Hispanics, Island shrunk between 2001 and 2010—commercial by 23 down from 73 percent in 1990. In addition, the share of percent and residential by 17 percent. foreign born residents jumped from 12 percent to 20 Another good sign for the local economy is that percent between 1990 and 2010. Staten Islanders have become more highly skilled. While The added population has supported a slew of new Staten Island currently has a lower share of residents businesses and jobs. Private sector employment on Staten with bachelor’s degrees than any borough except the Island increased by 32 percent between 1990 and 2009, Bronx, the number of Staten Islanders with at least a compared to a 4 percent gain citywide. The borough’s bachelor’s degree has almost doubled since 1990, from share of all private sector jobs in the city reached its 50,953 to 91,031. Importantly, the percentage of Black or highest level in 2009 (2.83 percent), up from 2.24 percent African American residents on Staten Island with at least in 1990. There were twice as many new firms started in a bachelor’s degree has increased from 14.5 percent in 2010 (2,822) as in 1990 (1,413) and the number of self- 1990 to 22.5 percent in 2009, while the share for Hispanics employed residents grew by 38 percent. has gone from 13.6 percent to 16.2 percent. The fastest growing sector on Staten Island during Not all the changes over the past two decades the past decade was accommodation and food services, were positive. Perhaps most noticeably, the explosive with a 35 percent increase in jobs, followed by educational population growth led to significantly more vehicles and services, which grew by 31 percent. A big part of the nightmarish traffic congestion. education growth is due to expansions at local colleges. Staten Island’s 24 percent gain in vehicle registrations Enrollment at Wagner College is up 48 percent since between 1992 and 2010 was by far the largest percentage 1990. At the College of Staten Island (CSI), enrollment increase of any borough. Only one other borough has risen by 32 percent just since 2000. (Manhattan, with an 11 percent gain) had a double-digit The health care sector added roughly 3,000 jobs in increase in vehicle registrations during this period, while the past 10 years. It is far and away the borough’s job both the Bronx (-10 percent) and Brooklyn (-8 percent) engine; with 27,320 jobs on Staten Island, health care has actually saw declines. Staten Island went from being the well over 11,000 jobs more than the next largest sector borough with the fewest registered vehicles in 1990 to (retail trade, with 15,953 jobs). having more than both the Bronx and Manhattan by 2010. Staten Island’s economic landscape has shifted Every Staten Island bridge crossing has seen a in many ways. Between 1997 and 2007, there was a 121 double-digit increase in daily traffic since 1990, with percent growth in computer systems design services traffic on the Bayonne Bridge growing by a staggering 64 firms and an 86 percent jump in management consulting percent. But while 54 percent of Staten Islanders drive services companies. Other sectors with strong gains to their jobs (up from 49 percent in 1990), 15,000 more were home health care services (with a 58 percent residents took public transit to work in 2009 than in 1990. increase in firms), architectural services (33 percent) and Center for an Urban Future 4 Staten Island: Then & Now The bus ridership increases underscore the need huge overall population gains over the past two decades, for transit investment. Between 1998 and 2010, 10 local the number of children under age 5 actually declined bus routes on Staten Island gained over 100,000 riders. between 2000 and 2009 and the share of the borough’s Express bus ridership was up by 55 percent. population under age 5 dropped from 7.4 percent in 1990 Two local bus routes experienced a spike of more to 6.7 percent in 2000 and 6.0 percent in 2009—a sign that than a million riders between 1998 and 2010—the S53 fewer families are raising kids on Staten Island. and S79. Not surprisingly, both take riders from Staten Similarly, there were roughly 2,000 fewer people Island to Brooklyn, where 30,380 Staten Islanders worked between the ages of 20 and 34 in 2009 than in 1990. in 2008, up from 25,256 in 1990.
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